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One feature in KDE 3.3 that is not mentioned in the article is a change in language evaluation.
The old way was: from the list of languages that the user likes, pick the first language that offers a translation of the program. Fill the rest with English.
The new was is: from the list of languages that the user likes, pick the first language that offers a translation of the program. Fill the rest with the translations from the second choice language etc. Fill the rest with English.

This is especially useful for smaller languages like Low Saxon where the rest of the translation of a program can be filled up with standard German.

Another (quite stupid) example from bugs.kde.org:
Kontact was not tranlated into Ukrainian, but kmail was. The user had said in kcontrol, that he likes Ukrainian and Russian in this order.

If you then start kmail as a standalone program you get in in Ukrainian. When you launch it via kontact, KDE finds out that Kontact is not translated into Ukrainian and uses Russian for kontact and all its submodules.

What I believe however is that language string contribution has to be made easier for ordinary users that are not skilled in Programming. This may help to fix the problem which in fact is lack of contributions.

Wouldn't it be nice if you were able to contribute to translations in a web page, wiki style? Hummm must think more about this. Or imagine that you are running a program that is not fully translated, you see a string that is not correctly (or not at all) translatted, you click Help->Tranlate String, the cursor changes, you click were the untranslated string is, and you are redirected to this wiki-style tranlation page, or the po file is opened for editing and when you click save the diff is uploaded to a server for review.

> What I believe however is that language string contribution has to be made
> easier for ordinary users that are not skilled in Programming. This may help
> to fix the problem which in fact is lack of contributions.

Well there is KBabel. No need for any programming skills. How much easier is it supposed to get?

I absolutely agree with the guy who wrote the kde 3.3 preview about the kwallet thing. It must be me, but I hadn't found the option to disable it yet (there might be something wrong with my configuration though).

Indeed, he's absolutely right. Nothing is more frustating than the requirement to type your password _every_ time after logging in (because of Kopete). I know it's not very safe to built in a "remember my KWallet password" option, but usability-wise this option is absolutely needed.

Personally, I think the best approach would be a simple PAM module that would try using the user's password to unlock the wallet. This would be, IMHO, the easiest way to make this happen. Then, it is just a matter of adding the option to the 'kde' pam config file.

on other platforms that don't support it you could still go the other way around. (or write something that fits better into that platform. having access to your own password hashes is a bad thing because email scripts, internet scripts, bash scripts, whatever script can send them up the internet to the hacker of choice, so he can brute force them.

Will there be full support for real SVG-icons in KDE 3.3? Or is there a possibility to use SVGs in KDE 3.2.3? :-(
Will Kitchensync have new connectors or will it even work? For example to sync with a Sony-Ericsson mobile? (T630) ;-)

Well, in fact the Reinhardt icons work a little *too* well...
You can scale them up to 256x256 in the tooolbar, with 1 pixel increments...
The popup menu gets huge!
In my index.desktop file I limit the range for action icons to 16-64, and the popup, shile still large, si somewhat more manageable. The popup menu (or the icon theme interface, maybe) should be improved to reduce the number of items shown, and maybe show a dialog if it is really *really* needed to have pixel-precise sizing.
There are another couple of bugs that while not too serious, make vector icon support look incomplete.

Simone Gotti started to implement a kitchensync konnector for IrmcSync. I've never used it myself, since I lack the phone to use it with, so I don't know exactly what's working already and what not. But in theory it should work with a T630.

You can find it in the CVS of kdebluetooth (kdeextragear-3). Compilation is disabled by default at the moment, since it depends on KDE 3.3.

AFAIK Simone is a bit short of time at the moment. I'm sure he will appreciate any help offered to make SonyEricsson/Siemens mobile phone users happy by completing the konnector ;)

Thanks for telling me about this IrmcSync-Feature. But I couldn't find a RPMed Version of kdebluetooth with this integrated.
And since I also couldn't figure out how to download from KDE(-Extragear)-CVS I gave up a bit frustrated...
So I'll wait for 3.3... ;-)

I never had a problem with the kdm pictures (I like being a stylised dragon thank you very much), but what bugs me is that in 3.2 the option to edit the session list in kcontrol seems to have gone missing. So I can no longer log into xfce from kdm. Anyone else have this problem?

The 3.2 Kdm is supposed to automatically find all of your installed window managers and destkops, and display them in the appropriate login menu. If XFCE is not displaying, it's either because you don't have it installed, it's installed under a name Kdm doesn't recognize, or Kdm doesn't know about XFCE.

First one keep complaining about small issues which are really subjective.

like the default look. I'm sorry, but I like life and bright color. It's what make KDE and Apple different from all other boring interface like Gnome and Windows.

Working on a computer is not only for boring gray guy wearing a tie.

I like curves, forms, movement, like cars and womans ;)
Keramik is great and looks ALIVE ! Plastik is dead and morgne. look like default gray GTK.

BUT WHO CARES !!! Its what makes Linux so great... use whatever you prefer. It's available to you. Keeping complaining about default look all along the review does not makes it a good review. Really boring to read.

For the orange and yellow in kmail, If I understood correctly what he was talking about ... The orange is customizable in colors, and the yellow is to show SECURITY RISK !!! Which MUST jump in user's eyes.

well, whatever.

and the second one... way more positive.. but unreadable...
come'on do you think we remember your 3.2 review ? All this insides jokes are way to much. Please be more professional. I've not been able to understand half of his review because of all his jokes, smiles and unreadable kiddies english.

About the review. You're right. It was unprofessional and did contain inside jokes, but the point was really to do a professional review. It was just one user's (mine) perspective on what i thought about certain things in the upcoming release and a chance to show screenshots to those who haven't seen it before.
Yes, it does sound childish at points and that was intentional because I am looking forward to this next release with childlike enthusiasm in my boosiasm. I'm weird like that. If you want professional reviews wait until 3.3 released when OSNEWS, PCLO and others will inevitably review it. If you want opinion and screenshots I got what you need :D Oh and about the english, I do sometimes forget that not everyone using KDE or reading the dot is english speaking so if I made it any harder to understand for the non native english speakers/readers I apologize. I'll try to remember to do better next time :p

With apparently both Juk and Amarok now in KDE 3.3, can someone enlighten me as to what the use, purpose or reason is for allowing any further existence of Noatun?

Look at the "freaking" Noatun website for a good laugh: http://noatun.kde.org/news.php#NoWereNotStillAlive "The primary reason nothing is happening here at noatun.kde.org is that we noatun developers consider noatun so close to completion it's not worth discussing."

In the mean time, are we supposed to wait for coders send from "above" to code heavenly plugins which are not likely to become default in 10 years and not likely to ever ex-hist in the first place, given developers and users are 'embracing' Juk and Amarok?

Is there some hidden secret agenda behind Noatun which is going to blow all our minds away in one big global awe? Please enlighten me as to why Noatun is even allowed to be in KDE anymore.

I completely agree. And everytime something like this is mentioned, nobody speaks up saying "I actually like noatun". And for those of you who do like noatun - I hope this was enough to make you reply ;-). I just use mplayer, kmplayer, kaffeine or xmms.

Well, here I am, I actually like noatun. I use kaffeine for playing videos, but I think it is an overkill for music. I use "wake up" plugin as my alarm clock (haven't found a single decent alarm clock program yet). noatun is simple, lightweight and full featured. May be I will change my opinion once I try amarok, this thread is definitely reason enough to go and compile it. So far I didn't look for an alternative music player, since despite a few minor annoyances, I found noatun to be a very nice program.

Hello ! It looks like KDE 3.1 to 3.2 had much more changes than KDE 3.2 to 3.3 doesn't it?

Anyway, it's wonderful that Chris' just one more time telling us what's new in the next KDE version ;-).

Chris mentions: " Kwin has suffered the occasional inexplicable death. You never really fully appreciate the term "Window Manager" until it's crashed and you realize just how much it does."

I totally agree with you man ! I've even suffered kwin crashes in KDE 3.2.x stable versions, and ended up filling a feature request, where I suggest the best possible solution: If the WM crashes, KDE should restart it smartly: http://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=82277 .

I'm happy you still hadn't any konqueror crash, because in FC1 + KDE 3.2.2 it likes crashing a lot =). I have filled a bug report that suggest a solution with a similar approach to the last one; this time the fix would be to ask the user if he want to recover last session when it opens a new konqui's window and it has just crashed. You can read the report in http://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=83803 .

Finally, Chris mentions that he configured gstreamer output in amaroK. I'm a tad curious: wasn't KDE 3.3 supposed to replace arts with other Sound System ? I think It would be sad if we continue with arts for another KDE big version; every other Sound Library I've used so far has worked better than it here. I think that I'm most probably wrong and the challenge was for KDE 4 :P.

If you take a look at Kommander you might decide it is worth putting on that list. It is somewhat revolutionairy in it's approach to bringing application extention through DCOP and rapid small application development to users and scripters. It is in the kdewebdev module.

What I'm finding kinda disturbing in KDE lately is the repetition of applications, can we just leave one application for each tasks... I don't know about Noatun, Juk and Amarok, but about kwrite and kedit... when will kedit will be removed ? My simple market researching shows that application redundancy confuses people.

My understanding was that KEdit will disappear as soon as the part that KWrite uses supports bi-directional text. So it's an i18n issue. If you are compiling from source you can use DO_NOT_COMPILE to remove certain applications anyway.

I agree in general that there should be some consolidation, particularly in the areas of image viewers and media players. There are also quite a few little applications that I suspect nobody uses or even finds because they are stuck in the "more applications" subfolders in the K menu.